Ethnic Differences in Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in the Circumpolar Region
Sargylana G. Boeskorova, Marina V. Afonskaya, Vera M. Argunova, Polina A. Sleptsova, Liudmila V. Leonteva, Vasilina V. Nikiforova, Irina A. Chikova, Alexandr A. Yakovlev, Tatiana E. Burtseva, Mikhail M. Kostik

TL;DR
Sakha children in the Arctic region have a higher prevalence of juvenile idiopathic arthritis with specific features and lower remission rates compared to Russian children.
Contribution
This study identifies ethnic-specific patterns in juvenile idiopathic arthritis among Sakha children and highlights the need for tailored healthcare approaches.
Findings
Sakha children have a higher prevalence of enthesitis-related arthritis and HLA-B27 positivity compared to Russian children.
Sakha children achieve remission less frequently and later in treatment compared to Russian children.
Web-service technologies and AI could improve healthcare access and outcomes for Sakha children with JIA.
Abstract
What are the main findings? Sakha children have a unique profile of JIA: higher prevalence, entesitis-related arthritis predominance, late access to biologic therapy, and lower probability to obtain remission with the first biological drug. Sakha children have a unique profile of JIA: higher prevalence, entesitis-related arthritis predominance, late access to biologic therapy, and lower probability to obtain remission with the first biological drug. What is the implication of the main finding? The optimization of the healthcare system: contemporary web-service technologies, including artificial intelligence, may shorten the gap to specialists’ consultation, and administration of the treatment, allowing entry into the window of opportunity and improving the disease’s outcomes (increasing the probability of remission). The optimization of the healthcare system: contemporary web-service…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders Research · Rheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies · Ocular Diseases and Behçet’s Syndrome
